New Bill Would Make
Restrictions on Public Funding of Abortions Permanent
150-plus Bipartisan House
Members Co-Sponsor 'No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act'
Part Three of four
WASHINGTON, D.C. –A
sweeping bill to permanently prohibit taxpayer funding of
abortion in every federal program was introduced today by
Congressmen Chris Smith (R-NJ) and Dan Lipinski (D-IL).
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Congressmen Chris
Smith |
The No Taxpayer Funding
for Abortion Act will establish a government-wide statutory
prohibition on abortion funding. The bipartisan bill has over
150 original cosponsors and will reduce the need for numerous
separate policies to prevent government funding for abortion.
"For decades, a patchwork
of short-term policies have prevented abortion funding in many
programs authorized by Congress, but it is time for a single,
government-wide permanent protection against taxpayer funding
for elective abortion," Smith said. "Abortion is lethal violence
against children and exploitation of women. This legislation
would establish a comprehensive policy prohibiting public
funding for elective abortion in all federal programs."
Lipinski said recent the
health care legislation showed the existing laws to prevent
taxpayer-funded abortion are too weak.
"The health care bill made
it clear that the current way we prevent taxpayer funding of
abortion through annual riders is dangerously fragile," Lipinski
said.
"To guarantee that
taxpayers are never forced to pay for abortions and the innocent
unborn are protected, we must make the longstanding ban on
federal funding for abortion permanent and government-wide.
Protecting the sanctity of life, and preserving the individual's
freedom not to be complicit in any way in abortion, is a matter
of principle for me and tens of millions of Americans."
Most of the existing
funding policies are limitation amendments attached to annual
appropriations bills (sometimes referred to as riders), which
have to be reapproved every year. This "ad hoc" approach usually
results in several distinct bans on abortion winning approval
each year.
This new legislation will
make permanent the policies that currently rely on regular
re-approval, including amendments like the well known Hyde
Amendment, which prohibits funding for elective abortion
coverage through any program funded through the annual Labor,
Health and Human Services Appropriations Act. It also would make
permanent other existing laws, such as: the Helms amendment,
which prohibits funding for abortion as a method of family
planning overseas; the Smith FEHBP amendment, which prohibits
funding for elective abortion coverage for federal employees;
the Dornan amendment, which prohibits use of congressionally
appropriated funds for abortion in the District of Columbia,
and; other policies such as the restrictions on elective
abortion funding through Peace Corps and Federal prisons.
"The comprehensive
approach eliminates the need for the numerous funding
protections and limitations approved every year and ensures that
no program or agency is exempt from this important safeguard,"
Smith said. "According to every reputable poll, large majorities
of Americans want no complicity whatsoever in paying for
abortion."
The bill also codifies the
Hyde-Weldon conscience clause that is part of the Hyde
amendment. The conscience clause ensures that recipients of
federal funding do not discriminate against health care
providers, including doctors, nurses and hospitals, because the
providers do not provide, pay for, provide coverage of, or refer
for abortions.
"The conscience clause is
a critical part of the law which protects health care providers
who do not want to take part in the abortion business." Smith
said. "Without it, people could be forced to participate in
something they strongly believe to be morally wrong. Without it,
faith-based hospitals could lose funding."
Part Four
Part One
Part Two |